by chadnik » Sat Oct 25, 2014 4:48 am
re: technology and learning: I'm TAing a hybrid class (mostly online, with weekly lectures that I teach). maybe I was a goodier-two-shoes as an undergrad than I remember, because it's kind of shocking to see how many kids are completely taking advantage of the online format to attain a good grade, in a way that nearly precludes any possibility of actual learning. basically, there are multiple-choice quizzes integrated into the online lectures, and they can retake them as many times as they want. I can see how many times they submit the quizzes, and how long it takes from start to finish. it's obvious by the number of submissions (as high as 25 for one person) that a lot of people are just going through and noting which answers are wrong, and retaking the quizzes until they get the correct answers by brute force. and then you have the kids who submit the quiz in 7 minutes or something ridiculous, making it obvious that they've gotten the answers from someone else (the content is all unique to this course, and it should take at least an hour if they're going through all the material; there are a lot of videos that you couldn't ctrl+f the answers to). I'm trying to set aside my personal attachment to my field/subject; obviously, the majority of these students aren't going to major in the thing I love. but it pains me to see that so many people blatantly don't care about the class, and to feel the disconnect from my physical classroom (which is generally pretty invigorating and gets decent participation). granted, I think a lot of people get shunted into courses because they fulfill some bullshit requirement, and I never want to hold people hostage to learning the exact things I want them to. but this is raising a lot of questions for me about the way online classes crack open the door to temptation (sort of like how y'all were talking about the distraction of laptops in general, even if your intentions are pure) and their viability as pedagogical resources at all.